I was following you through the cryogenic space travel but you lost me here.

You obviously don't understand why audio and video would be run to seperate components but that's o.k. As you say at your level of use it doesn't make much of a difference. Just buy a receiver that does all the complicated stuff for you and forget I ever mentioned it.

Also, I do understand why audio and video would be run to different component cables. It's because it's analog signal that has to be split between audio and visual so that there aren't any ghosting or noise crossover.

What YOU don't understand is how HDMI works or, as it seems, the difference between digital and analog.

Tell me, where exactly do you think you'll find a movie or some other media that has both video and audio, that uses high quality uncompressed audio AND video at the same time that HDMI couldn't handle better than a shitty Analog component?

On top of that, the way pretty much every electronic is these days, it all gets converted to digital anyway. So if that's the case, why convert it from digital to analog back to digital? How does that make it "pro" and not "stupid."

I'm gonna go with he probably isn't. With the way this has ended up, I'm assuming the worst for everything.

I am under the impression that HDMI ports don't do Analog if this is wrong then you are most likely right. If I am right about them not doing analog than it has to be DVI.

Originally Posted by Dr. Sleepless

What YOU don't understand is how HDMI works or, as it seems, the difference between digital and analog.

Tell me, where exactly do you think you'll find a movie or some other media that has both video and audio, that uses high quality uncompressed audio AND video at the same time that HDMI couldn't handle better than a shitty Analog component?

On top of that, the way pretty much every electronic is these days, it all gets converted to digital anyway. So if that's the case, why convert it from digital to analog back to digital? How does that make it "pro" and not "stupid."

Running separate components made sense when everything was analog.

I use to hate the discussions in school about analog vs digital with the people who lacked the experience in digital.
The only time your going to want analog over digital is if your Analog to digital sampling is below your Nyquist limit to net the results you want.
You also solve a lot of phase issues so that your audio and Video actually stay in sync with digital.

I am under the impression that HDMI ports don't do Analog if this is wrong then you are most likely right. If I am right about them not doing analog than it has to be DVI.

I use to hate the discussions in school about analog vs digital with the people who lacked the experience in digital.
The only time your going to want analog over digital is if your Analog to digital sampling is below your Nyquist limit to net the results you want.
You also solve a lot of phase issues so that your audio and Video actually stay in sync with digital.

It doesn't. I'm assuming he has some stupid converter thing on there.

Don't worry, Mr. Machete will fly in and continue to be vague and not explain his position.

On top of that, the way pretty much every electronic is these days, it all gets converted to digital anyway. So if that's the case, why convert it from digital to analog back to digital? How does that make it "pro" and not "stupid."

You know the more components you run the more you should want to run a digital solution. Is your industry stuck in the 80s?

Those are just power amplifiers. Even if your signal routing is purely digital from source to amp (not uncommon at all these days) something still has to drive the speakers. We don't have digital ears...

Re: Do you have technical issues? Let me try to help you.

Originally Posted by Dr. Sleepless

No. You're running an analog signal into a cable that converts it into a video only, digital signal. The cable is capable of massive data pulling, but at this point, nothing you're doing matters because you're not pushing out the right signal.

Maybe I'm tired and should just reread all this tomorrow, but I thought you said it's my video card not the cable that is putting out the wrong signal.

Those are just power amplifiers. Even if your signal routing is purely digital from source to amp (not uncommon at all these days) something still has to drive the speakers. We don't have digital ears...
...yet...

Very familiar with the concept, I use digital signals to control analog outputs often from motor controllers to driving relays to the what not.
With a proper digital setup you wouldn't need a ton of amplifiers.